The defendant, Martin Holmes, appeals his conviction by a jury for felonious sexual assault for engaging in sexual penetration with a *724 person who was thirteen years of age or older but less than sixteen years of age. See RSA 632-A:3, II (Supp. 2006) (amended 2006). He argues that the Superior Court (Fauver, J.) erred when it ruled that the State did not have to prove that he knew that the victim was under the age of legal consent. We affirm.
The parties do not dispute the following facts: The defendant is twenty-four years old. The victim met the defendant while walking with a friend in Rochester. Although she was fifteen years old, she told the defendant that she was seventeen. The victim and the defendant exchanged telephone numbers and spoke on the phone a few days later. Approximately a week later, after consuming alcohol, the victim phoned the defendant and arranged to meet him at a local park, where they eventually had sexual intercourse.
The defendant was charged by grand jury indictment with felonious sexual assault for having engaged in sexual penetration with a person, other than his legal spouse, who was then fifteen years old.
See
RSA 632-A:3, II. At the close of the State’s case, he moved to dismiss the charge on the ground that the State had failed to prove that he knew that the victim was less than sixteen years of age. Relying upon our prior case law, the trial court denied the motion, ruling that the State did not have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant knew that the victim was less than sixteen years old.
See Goodrow v. Perrin,
On appeal, the defendant invites us to overrule our prior precedent, which holds that the offense of felonious sexual assault with a person who is under the age of legal consent (statutory rape) “is a strict liability crime in that an accused cannot assert as a legal defense that he did not know the complainant was under the age of legal consent when penetration occurred.”
State v. Carlson,
The doctrine of stare decisis “demands respect in a society governed by the rule of law,” because “when governing legal standards are open to revision in every case, deciding cases becomes a mere exercise of judicial will, with arbitrary and unpredictable results.”
Brannigan v. Usitalo,
The defendant concentrates upon factors (3) and (4), conceding that factor (1) does not support overruling our prior precedent and contending that factor (2) does not support adhering to stare decisis. We will assume, without deciding, that factor (2) does not support adhering to stare decisis, and limit our discussion to factors (3) and (4).
I. Development of Related Principles of Law
The defendant first contends that we failed to interpret the statutory rape provision, RSA 632-A:3, II and its predecessors, correctly in our prior cases because we did not take into account another provision of the Criminal Code, RSA 626:2, I (1996). RSA 626:2, I, provides that a person may be found guilty of a crime only when he or she “acts purposely, knowingly, recklessly or negligently, as the law may require, with respect to each material element of the offense.” The defendant asserts that RSA 626:2,1, mandates proof of a culpable mens rea with respect to all material elements of the statutory rape statute, including the defendant’s knowledge of the victim’s age.
We interpreted RSA 632-A:3, II in concert with RSA 626:2,1, in
State v. Goodwin,
*726
Although we did not discuss in
Goodwin
whether this
mens rea
applied to the defendant’s knowledge of the victim’s age, we had previously held, in effect, that a defendant’s knowledge of the victim’s age is
not
a material element of statutory rape.
See Goodrow,
Since we decided Goodrow in 1979, the legislature has amended the statutory rape law numerous times, but has not seen fit to add a mens rea or to make reasonable mistake of age a defense. See Laws 1981, 415:4; Laws 1985, 228:4; Laws 1997, 220:3; Laws 2003, 226:3, 4. The legislature most recently amended the statutory rape provision during this past legislative session. See Laws 2006, 162:1. As amended, the statutory rape provision makes it a felony to engage in sexual penetration with a person other than one’s legal spouse who is thirteen years of age or older and less than sixteen years of age only where the age difference between the actor and the other person is three years or more. See id.
By amending the statutory rape provision, but failing to insert a
mens rea
or provide a reasonable mistake of age defense, the legislature has impliedly accepted our construction of that provision.
See Del Norte, Inc. v. Provencher,
The defendant next asserts that because adult consensual sexual relationships are not as regulated as they were when we decided our prior cases, there is no longer any justification for permitting strict liability for statutory rape. The defendant notes, for instance, that fornication is no longer a crime. Additionally, since we decided
Goodrow,
the United States Supreme Court ruled in
Lawrence v. Texas,
We decided
Goodrow,
however, assuming, without deciding, that the plaintiff
had
a constitutionally protected privacy right to engage in consensual heterosexual intercourse with other adults.
Goodrow,
[E]ven assuming that the plaintiff has a federal privacy right to engage in consensual heterosexual intercourse with adults, the right does not require the invalidation of [the statutory rape statute]. The reason is that the United States Constitution does not require us to permit the defense of an honest and reasonable mistake to a charged violation of the statutory [rape] provisions.
Id. at 489. Thus, the developments in the law since we decided Goodrow would not change our analysis.
Moreover, intent to commit the then-legally wrongful act of fornication was only one of the rationales for statutory rape laws.
See Collins v. State,
The State, by enacting [the statutory rape provision], has fixed the age at which a minor person may consent to sexual intercourse. In essence, this provision prohibits an adult, such as the plaintiff, from engaging in sexual intercourse with a person who is below the fixed age of consent. It is well established that the State has an independent interest in the well-being of its youth. One reason for this heightened interest is the vulnerability of children to harm. Another reason for the State’s concern is that minors below a certain age are unable to make mature judgments about important matters.
Goodrow,
*728
Statutory rape laws are based upon “a policy determination by the legislature that persons under the age of sixteen are not competent'to consent to sexual contact or sexual intercourse.”
State v. Jadowski,
The defendant next suggests that
Goodrow
is contrary to the modem trend of judicial decisions in this area. He notes that “several state courts have overruled prior precedent and have required either a culpable mens rea or have allowed for some kind of reasonable mistake of age defense.” To the contrary, “[i]n most states ... a mistake of age, no matter how reasonable, is no defense.” Loewy,
Statutory Rape in a Post Lawrence v. Texas World,
58 SMU L. Rev. 77, 88-89 (Winter 2005);
see
Carpenter,
On Statutory Rape, Strict Liability, and the Public Welfare Offense Model,
53 Am. U. L. Rev. 313, 316-17 (2003). While “mistake of age” “has been asserted successfully as a defense in several states and is recognized by the Model Penal Code when the child is over the age of ten years,... this defense remains the minority view. Far more states have rejected [it].”
Collins,
To the extent that a reasonable mistake of age defense exists in certain states, it is generally because the legislature has amended the applicable statute, not because the judiciary has engrafted this defense onto a statute that does not contain it. Indeed, at oral argument, the defendant conceded that hardly any states have a reasonable mistake of age defense. See Carpenter, supra at 385-91 (legislatures in three states have enacted statutes in which reasonable mistake of age is a defense regardless of age of victim; legislatures in eighteen states have enacted statutes providing *729 for defense of reasonable mistake of age depending upon relative age of victim and perpetrator; in remaining twenty-nine states, reasonable mistake of age is no defense to statutory rape). As one commentator has noted, “[I]n more recent times it has been recognized that [whether there should be a reasonable mistake of age defense to statutory rape] is a policy matter that ought to be specifically addressed in the statutory definition of the crime.” W. LAFAVE, SUBSTANTIVE CRIMINAL LAW § 17.4(c) at 650 (2d ed. 2003).
For all of the above reasons, we conclude that the defendant has failed to demonstrate that our decision in
Goodrow
is “no more than a remnant of abandoned doctrine.”
Jacobs,
II. Changed Circumstances
The defendant next contends that changed circumstances have robbed Goodrow of significant application or justification. Id. Specifically, he observes that the age of consent has risen while the age at which adolescents are becoming sexually active has declined over time. Further, he notes, the degree of punishment and social ostracism associated with the crime of statutory rape has escalated.
While these legitimate policy concerns might support a reasonable mistake of age defense, we believe that it is up to the legislature, not us, to create one. When we decided
Goodrow,
Affirmed.
